19 June 2026

The Armed State: Structural Barriers to Constitutional Reform for China’s Liberalization



Introduction

Western analysis of China’s 2018 constitutional amendment—which abolished presidential term limits—frequently lapses into a simplistic, personalized narrative. It is routinely framed as the solitary hubris of Xi Jinping. However, this interpretation ignores the foundational reality of the Chinese party-state: power flows from the barrel of a gun. Xi’s consolidation of power was not a unilateral coup against the system; it was an institutional realignment actively pushed and backed by the People’s Liberation Army (PLA). To understand Xi is to understand him not merely as a civilian bureaucrat, but as the authentic representative of the military elite.

Furthermore, the vehicle that approved this historic amendment—the National People’s Congress (NPC)—is routinely dismissed as a mere "rubber stamp." This euphemism hides a far darker reality. The NPC is a pseudo-legislative body structurally penetrated, controlled, and flanked by the military. Recognizing this symbiosis fundamentally alters the blueprint for any future Chinese liberalization. If the core of the regime is a nuclear-armed, Leninist-military complex masquerading as a constitutional government, then true reform cannot be achieved by political tinkering. It demands a radical, structural tri-factor: De-nuclearization, Demilitarization, and De-Leninization.

Part I: Xi Jinping as the Avatar of the "Gun Barrel"

To understand why the military backed the 2018 constitutional change, one must examine Xi’s unique pedigree. Unlike his predecessors Jiang Zemin and Hu Jintao—who were pure civilian technocrats who cultivated military loyalty from scratch—Xi is a native son of the military establishment.

[Xi's Military Pedigree]
  ├── 1979-1982: Active Duty (Geng Biao's Secretary, Central Military Commission)
  ├── 1985-2007: Deep Roots in Nanjing Military Region (Fujian, Zhejiang, Shanghai)
  └── Ideological: "Red Second Generation" (Son of revolutionary general Xi Zhongxun)

As the son of revolutionary pioneer Xi Zhongxun, Xi inherits deep institutional trust within the military. More importantly, his career began in uniform. From 1979 to 1982, Xi served as an active-duty officer and secretary to Geng Biao, then-Secretary-General of the Central Military Commission (CMC) and Minister of National Defense. Throughout his subsequent decades in Fujian, Zhejiang, and Shanghai, Xi concurrently held top political-military roles (such as First Political Commissar) within the Nanjing Military Region—the strategic frontline for the Taiwan Strait.

Therefore, when Xi aligned the state presidency with the term-limitless positions of Party General Secretary and CMC Chairman in 2018, he was executing a strategy desired by the military high command. The PLA sought a permanent, authoritative commander-in-chief to oversee its massive structural modernization, manage geopolitical gridlock with the United States, and secure the regime's existential survival. Xi did not subvert the system; the "gun barrel" used Xi to institutionalize its own permanent dominance.

Part II: The Myth of the Civilian Legislature—PLA Hegemony in the NPC

The institutional complicity of the military is starkly evident in the structural composition of the National People’s Congress itself. Far from being a representation of the Chinese electorate, the NPC has been heavily militarized since its inception in 1954.

1. The Largest Voting Block

The PLA and the People’s Armed Police (PAP) do not just have token representation; they constitute the largest single delegation in the NPC. In recent congresses (such as the 13th and 14th NPC), the military delegation hovered more than 250 delegates. This dwarfs the representations of China’s most populous provinces, such as Henan or Shandong, despite the military representing a fraction of their populations.



2. Dual-Layer Infiltration

The military’s capture of the legislature operates on two distinct levels:

  • The Formal Delegation: The massive, unified PLA/PAP delegation that votes strictly as a single, disciplined bloc under military command.

  • The Embedded Agents: Since the 1st National People's Congress in 1954, high-ranking military commanders and officers have been intentionally embedded into various provincial and municipal delegations. Historically, revolutionary generals and commanders like Chen Yi (placed in the Shanghai delegation), Luo Ruiqing (Hebei), and Yang Chengwu (Tianjin) acted as local representatives while holding profound military weight. This dual-layer strategy ensures that the military's voice and oversight are woven into regional delegations, guaranteeing absolute obedience.

When the NPC voted nearly unanimously to alter the constitution in 2018, it was not a civilian legislature bowing to a dictator; it was an institution operating with a gun to its head, staffed internally by the very officers wielding the gun.

Part III: The Structural Barriers to Constitutional Reform

If the military and the Leninist party apparatus are the true authors of China's political trajectory, it follows that traditional Western hopes for "evolutionary political reform" are an illusion. The current regime is not a standard authoritarian government that can be gradually democratized through civil society or legal reforms. It is a totalizing organism designed to resist internal friction.

Hence, any meaningful path toward a free, constitutional China requires a complete dismantling of the coercive machinery that anchors the current state. This necessitates the "Three-Noes"  framework:

1. De-Leninization

A Leninist organization operates on absolute vertical command, where the party permeates every cell of society, the judiciary, the economy, and the military. In a Leninist state, "constitutionalism" is a contradiction in terms, because the Party is explicitly placed above the law.

The Logic: You cannot build a constitutional democracy while a Leninist structure exists. A free society requires political pluralism, an independent judiciary, and autonomous civic groups. The Leninist party-state naturally treats these as cancerous cells to be destroyed. Therefore, the total dissolution of the Leninist organizational model is the baseline prerequisite for freedom.

2. Demilitarization 

In China, the PLA does not belong to the nation; it belongs strictly to the Party ("The Party commands the gun"). The military is the ultimate guarantor of the party's monopoly on power, functioning as a domestic occupation force as much as a national defense force.

The Logic: Constitutional transition is impossible if an autonomous, highly politicized military holds a veto over political life. For democratization to succeed, the armed forces must either be entirely dissolved or fundamentally reconstituted from scratch as a neutral, civilian-controlled national military. True liberalization requires removing the military's ability to act as a political kingmaker.

3. De-nuclearization

The possession of nuclear weapons provides a Leninist-military regime with absolute geopolitical blackmail power. It insulates the ruling elite from external pressure and creates an existential shield behind which they can perpetrate domestic repression with impunity.

The Logic: A nuclear-armed totalitarian state is a threat not just to its own people, but to the world. During a volatile domestic political transition, nuclear weapons under the control of desperate, ideological, or fracturing military factions pose an tragic global hazard. De-nuclearization is essential to disarm the regime's ultimate tool of extortion, ensuring that the process of domestic liberalization can occur without the risk of global nuclear annihilation.

Conclusion



The 2018 constitutional amendment was the clearest signal yet that the Chinese party-state has closed all doors to internal, incremental reform. It revealed a regime completely aligned with its military core, prepared for long-term systemic confrontation, and structurally locked down by a heavily militarized NPC.

For international policymakers and democratic advocates, the lesson is clear: hoping for a moderate faction within the CCP to emerge and steer China toward freedom is a fantasy. Because the regime's power is structurally anchored by a nuclear-armed, military-backed Leninist state, true liberalization requires nothing less than a complete structural reset. Only through complete De-Leninization, Demilitarization, and De-nuclearization can the Chinese people finally break free from the cycle of autocracy and establish a genuine constitutional republic.


#Democracy #Christ #Peace #Freedom #Liberty #Humanrights #人权 #法治 #宪政 #独立审计 #司法独立 #独立自治

18 June 2026

The PLA's Seats in China's Legislature: How the People's Liberation Army Helps Run the "People's" Congress




In the People's Republic of China (PRC), the National People's Congress (NPC) is formally the highest organ of state power and the country's unicameral legislature. In practice, it functions largely as a rubber-stamp body that approves decisions made by the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) leadership. One structural feature stands out as particularly revealing of the regime's hybrid military-party nature: the dedicated, oversized representation of the People's Liberation Army (PLA) and, more recently, the People's Armed Police (PAP).Institutionalized Military PresenceUnlike most modern states, where legislatures represent civilian populations and the military remains subordinate and apolitical in lawmaking, China's system embeds the armed forces directly into the legislative branch at every level.
  • The NPC allocates a specific electoral unit for the PLA/PAP. This military delegation is consistently one of the largest — often the single largest — in the nearly 3,000-member body. In the 14th NPC, it holds 281 seats, exceeding even populous provinces like Shandong (173 deputies).
  • PLA delegates are elected internally through servicemen's congresses in theater commands, service branches, and other military units, under a dedicated election law.
  • This pattern repeats at provincial and local People's Congresses, where active-duty PLA officers serve as "gun barrel" (ie troops) representatives alongside civilian delegates.
Historical numbers illustrate the scale: PLA delegations have ranged from dozens in early NPCs to peaks of hundreds, typically stabilizing around 9% of total seats in recent decades — disproportionate representation for roughly 2 million active personnel compared to over a billion civilians.Recent Example: Meng Jidong and Unit 93601A January 2026 announcement for the 14th Shanxi Provincial People's Congress listed Meng Jidong, a member of PLA Unit 93601 (part of the Central Theater Command Air Force), as a military representative. Meng has published on implementing Xi Jinping's "strong army" ideology and political work amid military reforms.Such appointments are routine. Military personnel rotate through these roles, blurring lines between command of force and crafting of law. Earlier records show PLA-linked delegates removed or reassigned as "work adjustments," confirming the system treats legislative seats as extensions of military service.Meng Jidong: Deputy Political Commissar of PLA Air Force Unit 95028; he was confirmed as a deputy to the Hubei Provincial People’s Congress by Hubei Provincial People’s Congress Standing Committee Announcement No. 289 on January 23, 2021, remained a provincial deputy until Announcement No. 341 on January 28, 2024 confirmed that he had left Hubei, and was later identified in a January 2026 announcement of the Shanxi Provincial People’s Congress Standing Committee as serving in PLA Air Force Unit 93601.

The systemic weaponisation of civilian legislative bodies by active-duty military personnel is not an isolated tactical anomaly confined to Hubei's army units; it is a standardized, nationwide doctrine executed by the PLA High Command. The career trajectory of Meng Jidong (孟吉东), a political commissar in the PLA Air Force, offers a chilling textbook example of how military-legislative status functions as a "portable infiltration asset" across provincial borders.

[ Meng Jidong: PLAAF Political Commissar ]
                    │
        ┌───────────┴───────────┐
        ▼                       ▼
  (2021-2024: HUBEI)      (2026: SHANXI)
  - Unit 95028 (Airborne) - Unit 93601 (Air Force)
  - Hubei Provincial NPC  - Shanxi Provincial NPC
    Delegate (No. 289)      Delegate
  • The Mobility of Infiltration: According to Announcement No. 289 of the Hubei Provincial NPC, Meng—then serving as the Deputy Political Commissar of PLAAF Unit 95028 (a strategic airborne hub)—was injected into the provincial legislature in January 2021. The moment he vacated his post in Hubei (confirmed by Announcement No. 341 in January 2024), his legislative "mandate" vanished, only to miraculously reincarnate in January 2026 within the Shanxi Provincial NPC, tracking his transfer to PLAAF Unit 93601 under the Central Theatre Command.

  • The Ideological Blueprint for War Readiness: To decode what Meng's actual mission is within these civilian congresses, one must look at his 2018 forensic paper published while serving in the Logistics Department of the Central Theatre Command Air Force, titled "Actively Responding to New Challenges of Military Reform, Vigorously Promoting the Innovative Development of Political Work." In the text, Meng explicitly argues that under "Xi Jinping’s Thinking on Strengthening the Military," political work must evolve to meet "new systems, new functions, and new missions."

In the strict language of defense analysis, this "innovative political work" is code for establishing an uninterrupted wartime mobilisation matrix. By inserting senior Air Force logistics and political commissars into provincial legislatures across multiple strategic corridors (from the airborne infrastructure of Hubei to the radar and missile defense depths of Shanxi), the CCP ensures that the military holds the legislative keys to the hinterland.

These "gun-barrel delegates" do not represent civilian constituents; they are the advance vanguard tasked with ensuring that when the CCP launches its kinetic aggression in the Pacific, local civilian bureaucracies, transport networks, and airspace logistics can be instantly and legally subordinated to the military machine.
Implications: Party-Army Fusion in LegislationThis structure is not accidental. Since the founding of the PRC, the CCP has viewed the PLA as the "party's army," not a national military in the Western sense. Mao Zedong's famous dictum — "Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun" — and the principle that "the Party commands the gun" underscore the integration.PLA delegates actively participate by submitting proposals, especially on defense budgets, military modernization, and related laws. They help shape legislation that the armed forces then implement — and obey. This creates a feedback loop where the military influences the rules governing itself within a nominally civilian legislative framework.Critics, including some Chinese scholars, have noted that this overrepresentation violates principles of equal representation and reinforces the military's privileged position. In a system where all power ultimately flows from the CCP Politburo and its Central Military Commission (chaired by Xi Jinping), the PLA's legislative role reinforces unified party-army control rather than checks and balances.Broader Context of CCP GovernanceThe People's Congress system at all levels divides representation between "uniformed" (military) and non-uniformed tracks. This is consistent with the PRC's self-description as a "people's democratic dictatorship" led by the working class under CCP guidance — where the PLA serves as the ultimate guarantor of that dictatorship.Far from being a neutral professional force, the military is woven into the fabric of lawmaking, policy approval, and personnel appointments. This setup helps explain the regime's cohesion: the same apparatus that suppresses dissent also ratifies the legal framework for governance.Why It MattersAs China pursues military-civil fusion, rapid modernization (with the PLA centenary goal in 2027), and assertive foreign policy, understanding these institutional links is essential. The presence of active-duty officers in the legislature is not mere symbolism — it is a feature of how the CCP maintains absolute control, ensuring that "legislation" aligns with the priorities of the party and its gun.Observers tracking China's political and military trajectory should pay closer attention to these military delegates. They offer a window into the regime's true nature: not a conventional nation-state with separate civilian and military branches, but a Leninist party-army hybrid where the barrel of the gun helps write the laws.


#Democracy #Christ #Peace #Freedom #Liberty #Humanrights #人权 #法治 #宪政 #独立审计 #司法独立 #独立自治

17 June 2026

Inside the Garrison State: How a PLA NPC Delegate is Weaponising "Joint Mechanisms" to Subvert Civilian Governance in Hubei


Introduction: The Illusion of Separation

Western analysts frequently misinterpret the Chinese National People's Congress (NPC) and the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC) as mere rubber-stamp civilian legislatures or ceremonial advisory bodies. However, looking deeper into the provincial level via Open-Source Intelligence (OSINT) reveals a more calculated reality: the systemic, lattice-like infiltration of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) into local civilian administration via institutional identity laundering.

A granular investigation into the career trajectory of  Gong Hongbin(龚鸿斌)—a PLA officer straddling both legislative and consultative bodies—and a recent policy overhaul in Hubei Province provides a definitive case study in how the CCP quiet-launches a "Garrison State" model through deliberate political deception.

Institutional Identity Laundering: The "Specially Invited" Commander

To understand the mechanics of this military creep, one must trace the meticulously engineered dual-identity of Gong Hongbin.

  • January 2021: According to Announcement No. 289 of the Standing Committee of the Hubei Provincial People's Congress, Gong was "elected" as a delegate to the 13th Hubei Provincial NPC via a closed-door military congress (驻鄂部队军人大会). At the time, he held the dual roles of Commander of the PLA Enshi Military Sub-district and Member of the Standing Committee of the CCP Enshi Prefectural Committee.

  • January 2023: In a striking maneuver of political masquerade, Gong was appointed as a member of the Hubei Provincial Committee of the CPPCC. Crucially, his assigned sector (界别) was neither the "Chinese Communist Party" nor the "Military/Armed Police" sector. Instead, he was slipped into the list under the guise of "Specially Invited Persons" (特别邀请人士)—a category traditionally reserved for overseas diaspora leaders, Hong Kong/Macau tycoons, and civilian figures meant to project an illusion of pluralism.

  • May 2023: Shortly after securing these legislative and consultative anchors, Gong vacated his regional command in Enshi to assume a crucial post at the provincial core: Director of the Garrison Office of the PLA Hubei Provincial Military District (湖北省军区警备办公室主任).

              [ Gong Hongbin's Laundering Matrix ]
                               │
         ┌─────────────────────┼─────────────────────┐
         ▼                     ▼                     ▼
 [Military Power]     [Legislative Anchor]   [Consultative Cloak]
  PLA Hubei Garrison   Hubei Provincial NPC   Hubei CPPCC Member
    Office Director         Delegate          as "Specially Invited
                                                    Person"

This structural deception shatters the foundational narrative of the CPPCC. It proves that the entire "political consultation" system is a apparatus of elite misdirection. By hiding an active-duty military commander inside a pseudo-civilian sector, the CCP successfully launders a hard-line asset of the state's "gun barrel" into civilian policy networks without triggering domestic or international alarm.

The 10 Joint Mechanisms: An Anatomy of Totalitarian Creep

The true impact of Gong Hongbin’s laundered appointment became manifest on 29 November 2023, when state-run media Hubei Daily lauded a comprehensive policy overhaul spearheaded by Gong’s Garrison Office: The "Ten Joint Mechanisms" for Military-Civilian Collaboration (湖北军地警备工作军地协作机制).

While framed by propaganda as a benign initiative to catch "fake soldiers" at Wuhan Tianhe Airport and clear counterfeit uniforms off e-commerce platforms, a forensic audit of these ten mechanisms—Joint Behavioural Control, Joint Military Vehicle Management, Joint Enforcement Inspection, Joint Police-Military Rectification, and Joint Information Interconnection—reveals a profound expansion of military jurisdiction.

Through these mechanisms, Gong’s military office has formally co-opted eleven civilian state agencies, effectively placing the PLA at the center of local governance:

  1. Surveillance and Police Co-optation: Under "Joint Enforcement," civilian police officers and market regulators are now systematically deployed as executive appendages of military patrols at transport hubs, tourist destinations, and universities.

  2. Cyberspace and Market Purges: In the name of "clearing illicit military goods," the PLA Garrison Office has begun co-ordinating with the Cyberspace Administration (网信办) to audit and censor major e-commerce platforms, dictating what can be sold and discussed online.

  3. Ideological Infiltration of Universities: Gong's office has breached academic boundaries, partnering with the Provincial Department of Education to conduct mandatory "legal propaganda" and ideological vetting at civilian institutions like the Zhongnan University of Economics and Law.

  4. Judicial Weaponisation: The Garrison Office has convened joint sessions with local Procuratorates (Prosecutors) to orchestrate "public interest litigation," transforming civilian courts into instruments for enforcing military discipline and protection.

The Ultimate Objective: "Preparing for War"

Propaganda rarely speaks the truth, but it occasionally slips. The Hubei Daily report explicitly notes that the ultimate baseline of these joint mechanisms is to "persist in orienting towards war and combat" (坚持向战为战).

Under Gong Hongbin's direction, the Garrison Office used these mechanisms to establish permanent 24-hour military control points at transport hubs and civilian infrastructure. During large-scale military exercises, these "joint mechanisms" allow the PLA to seamlessly command civilian police to enforce road closures, secure drop zones, and commandeer civilian logistics pipelines without relying on clumsy peacetime mobilization decrees.

Conclusion: The Betrayal of Autonomy

The structural integration achieved by Gong Hongbin in Hubei provides a sobering answer to how the CCP views modern governance. The CPPCC is not an advisory council; it is a camouflage netting for military expansion into civil society.

By granting a PLA Commander the legislative immunity of an NPC delegate, the deceptive cloak of a "Specially Invited" CPPCC member, and the administrative levers to command civilian police, internet censors, and university boards, the CCP has created an omnipresent surveillance matrix. The "Ten Joint Mechanisms" of Hubei are a warning to the world: the line between civilian life and military total-control in China has not just been blurred—it has been entirely erased.


#Democracy #Christ #Peace #Freedom #Liberty #Humanrights #人权 #法治 #宪政 #独立审计 #司法独立 #独立自治

The Red Thread of Persecution: How Communist Geopolitics Shaped the Global War on Christianity


When we read reports today about the systematic oppression of Christians under communist regimes, it is easy to view these human rights crises in isolation. We read about China’s shuttered house churches and high-tech diaspora surveillance, North Korea’s brutal prison camps, and Vietnam’s targeting of ethnic minority Christians.

However, looking at these events as isolated domestic policies is a profound mistake.

The ongoing tragedy of Christian persecution in East Asia is not a collection of regional anomalies. It is the direct, bitter fruit of a century-old, interconnected geopolitical project. To understand the suffering of believers today, we must follow the "Red Thread"—the historical line of Soviet and Chinese interventions that systematically exported an ideology fundamentally incompatible with religious freedom.

1. The Genesis: The Soviet Blueprint Explodes into China

Communist persecution of Christians

The root of modern state-sponsored anti-Christian persecution in Asia begins with the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). Following the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution, Vladimir Lenin and Joseph Stalin established a militantly atheistic state. Christianity was viewed not just as an alternative worldview, but as a dangerous, counter-revolutionary threat to total state control.

Soviet intervention Chinese civil war

This ideological war was actively exported. During the Chinese Civil War, massive Soviet financial, military, and strategic intervention was a decisive factor in the Chinese Communist Party's (CCP) rise to power. When the CCP established the People's Republic of China in 1949, they imported the Soviet blueprint wholesale.

Religious freedom in Asia

The immediate result? The expulsion of foreign missionaries, the imprisonment of native pastors, and the forced subjugation of churches under the state-run "Three-Self Patriotic Movement." Today’s crackdowns on Chinese house churches are simply the digital-age evolution of the control mechanisms Stalin handed to Mao Zedong.

2. Exporting Tyranny: The Interventions in Korea and Vietnam

Once established, the CCP, alongside its Soviet backers, acted as the primary geopolitical engine expanding this totalitarian model across Asia. China transnational repression

The Korean Peninsula

The horrors faced by North Korean Christians today—where owning a Bible is a ticket to a lifetime of hard labor or execution—cannot be detached from history. The North Korean regime was installed under Soviet occupation and preserved entirely by China’s massive military intervention during the Korean War. Without Beijing’s intervention to prop up the Kim dynasty, the regime's unique, quasi-religious cult of personality (which views Christianity as its ultimate rival) would never have survived to torment generations of believers.

The Vietnam Conflict

Similarly, in Vietnam, the communist victory was heavily financed and supplied by both the Soviet Union and China. The subsequent consolidation of power by the Vietnamese Communist Party brought about the systematic suppression of indigenous Christian groups, particularly the Montagnards and Hmong ethnic minorities. The party’s historical suspicion of Christianity as a tool of "foreign subversion" directly mirrors the rhetoric used by Moscow in the 1930s and Beijing in the 1950s.

3. The Modern Reality: A Unified Legacy of Totalitarian Control

Today, the Berlin Wall has fallen, and the USSR is history. Yet, the geopolitical structures created by these historical interventions remain alive and lethal.  Christian persecution history.

[Historic Soviet Blueprint]
          │
          ▼
[CCP Rise to Power (1949)] ──► [Exported via Intervention to North Korea & Vietnam]
          │                                                │
          ▼                                                ▼
[High-Tech Transnational Repression]         [Brutal Domestic Ideological Purges]

In the 21st century, this persecution has broken past physical borders. The modern CCP utilizes advanced facial recognition, digital financial tracking, and transnational repression to monitor and threaten Christian dissidents even after they flee abroad to Western democracies. Meanwhile, Beijing continues to act as a diplomatic shield, protecting regimes like North Korea from being held accountable for crimes against humanity at the United Nations.

Conclusion: The Danger of Historical Amnesia

The international community frequently makes the mistake of separating human rights disasters from historical political systems. We advocate for religious freedom while coddling or ignoring the specific ideological frameworks that actively destroy it.

The persecution of Christians in China, North Korea, and Vietnam is a continuous historical event. It is the surviving lineage of a totalitarian ideology that demands absolute devotion to the state, viewing the Christian declaration that "Jesus is Lord" as an existential threat to its power. Until global policymakers recognize that today's persecution is deeply rooted in this unbroken chain of communist geopolitics, our efforts to end these human rights abuses will remain tragically ineffective.

About the Author: This blog explores the intersections of history, faith, and international relations, aiming to give a voice to religious communities facing systemic oppression.

#Democracy #Christ #Peace #Freedom #Liberty #Humanrights #人权 #法治 #宪政 #独立审计 #司法独立 #独立自治

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